You are reading

Leading Candidates in Queens Council Races Secure Victories After Absentee Votes Tallied

Julie Won, Linda Lee, Felicia Singh and Lynn Schulman have all won their respective races (campaign photos)

July 7, 2021 By Allie Griffin

The leading candidates in Queens council races have secured victories after absentee ballots were counted Tuesday.

The NYC Board of Elections (BOE) released the most complete results Tuesday, with the majority of absentee ballots tallied and ranked choice voting tabulations applied.

Several races that were nail-biters on election night turned out to have clear winners after ranked choice voting went into effect and the absentee ballots were counted.

Races in Council Districts 23, 26, 29 and 32 were particularly close based on first-choice votes that were cast in person.

However, once the BOE published the preliminary ranked-choice results Friday night, voters got a clearer picture of the likely winners in each of the four races. Still those results didn’t include thousands of absentee ballots.

The presumed winners Friday held onto their leads after the latest results— with absentees included, were published Tuesday.

In District 23, Linda Lee came out ahead of runner-up Jaslin Kaur by nearly 700 votes after six rounds of ranked choice voting tabulations.

Lee, the president and CEO of Korean Community Services of Metropolitan New York (KCS), earned 53.2 percent of the vote, compared to Kaur who generated 46.8 percent of the vote.

Lee and Kaur were neck-and-neck during several rounds of ranked choice voting. Kaur even surpassed Lee in round five, but ultimately lost when the third and fourth place candidates Steve Behar and Debra Markell were eliminated and their votes were redistributed.

Kaur conceded to Lee ahead of the latest results.

The D-23 seat represents the neighborhoods of Bayside Hills, Bellerose, Douglaston, Floral Park, Fresh Meadows, Glen Oaks, Hollis, Hollis Hills, Holliswood, Little Neck, New Hyde Park, Oakland Gardens and Queens Village.

Meanwhile, in the city’s most crowded council race, Julie Won widened the gap between herself and runner-up Amit Bagga for the District 26 seat once absentee votes were calculated.

Won and Bagga broke out from the rest of the 15-candidate field on the night of the election and were less than one percentage point apart, or 125 votes. The candidates both seek to represent Long Island City, Sunnyside, Woodside and Dutch Kills in the City Council.

Won pulled out ahead of Bagga after 15 rounds of ranked choice voting. Her 1,420-vote lead on Friday increased to a 1,613-vote margin with the inclusion of absentee ballots. She earned 56.7 percent of votes compared to Bagga who received 43.3 percent.

A few districts over, Lynn Schulman benefited from absentee ballots in the District 29 race to represent Rego Park, Forest Hills, Kew Gardens and Richmond Hill.

Schulman’s lead over Aleda Gagarin increased from 1,581 votes on Friday to 2,407 votes on Tuesday, when absentee ballots were included in the count. She ultimately garnered 60 percent of the vote after eight rounds of ranked choice voting, while Gagarin earned 40 percent.

Gagarin also conceded to Schulman ahead of the absentee count.

Meanwhile in District 32, Felicia Singh slightly increased the margin between herself and second-place candidate, Michael Scala. After three rounds of ranked choice voting tabulations, she beat out Scala by 441 votes.

She led him by 405 before absentee ballots were included in the count. On election night, she was up by just 112 votes based on first choice votes.

Singh will continue on to face off Republican Joann Ariola in a November general election for the seat representing Belle Harbor, Breezy Point, Broad Channel, Howard Beach, Lindenwood, Neponsit, Ozone Park, Richmond Hill, Rockaway Park, Roxbury, South Ozone Park, West Hamilton Beach and Woodhaven.

The D-32 seat, currently held by term-limited Council Member Eric Ulrich, is the borough’s lone Republican seat within in the City Council.

The presumed winners and the runners-up of less competitive races in Queens Democratic primaries are as follows.

District 19 (Auburndale, Bay Terrace, Bayside, Beechhurst, College Point, Douglaston, Flushing, Little Neck, Malba, Whitestone): Tony Avella with 54.7 percent of votes after four rounds of RCV, ahead of Richard Lee with 45.3 percent of votes

District 20 (Downtown Flushing, Murray Hill, Queensboro Hill): Sandra Ung with 55.2 percent of votes after eight rounds of RCV, ahead of Ellen Young with 44.8 percent of votes

District 21 (East Elmhurst, Elmhurst, Jackson Heights, and Corona in Queens, including Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Lefrak City and LaGuardia Airport): incumbent Francisco Moya with 51.6 percent of votes outright, ahead of Ingrid Gomez with 18.2 percent of votes

District 22 (Astoria, East Elmhurst, Jackson Heights, Woodside): Tiffany Cabán with 62.6 percent of votes after three rounds of RCV, ahead of Evie Hantzopoulos with 37.4 percent of votes

District 24 (Kew Gardens Hills, Pomonok, Electchester, Fresh Meadows, Hillcrest, Jamaica Estates, Briarwood, Parkway Village, Jamaica Hills, Jamaica): incumbent James Gennaro with 60.1 percent of votes outright, ahead of Moumita Ahmed with 22.5 percent of votes

District 25 (Elmhurst, Jackson Heights): Shekar Krishnan with 53.4 percent of votes after seven rounds of RCV, ahead of Yi Andy Chen with 46.6 percent of votes

District 27 (Cambria Heights, Hollis, Jamaica, St. Albans, Queens Village, and Springfield Gardens): Nantasha Williams with 72.9 percent of votes after 13 rounds of RCV, ahead of James Johnson with 27.1 percent of votes

District 28 (Jamaica, Richmond Hill, Rochdale Village, South Ozone Park): incumbent Adrienne Adams with 53.4 percent of votes outright, ahead of Japneet Singh with 24.1 percent of votes

District 30 (Glendale, Maspeth, Middle Village, Ridgewood, Woodhaven, Woodside): incumbent Robert Holden with 54.6 percent of votes outright, ahead of Juan Ardila with 45 percent of votes

District 31 (Arverne, Brookville, Edgemere, Far Rockaway, Laurelton, Rosedale, Springfield Gardens): incumbent Selvena Brooks-Powers with 67.4 percent of votes outright, ahead of Nancy Martinez with 19 percent of votes

District 34 (Ridgewood, Williamsburg, Bushwick): Jennifer Gutierrez with 79.5 percent of votes outright, ahead of Scott Murphy with 8.5 percent of votes

The presumed winners of the Republican primaries in Queens are below.

District 19: Vickie Paladino with 51.6 percent of votes outright, ahead of John-Alexander Sakelos with 47 percent of votes

District 23: James Reilly with 66.5 percent of votes outright, ahead of Alex Amoroso with 29.5 percent of votes

District 24: Timothy Rosen with 59.2 percent of votes outright, ahead of Angelo King with 36.2 percent of votes

District 32: Joann Ariola with 82 percent of votes outright, ahead of Stephen Sirgiovanni with 17 percent of votes

The BOE is expected to certify the official results of the primary elections sometimes next week, which will codify the official winners in each race.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Fall fun in western Queens: Your guide to the best seasonal events

Aug. 29, 2025 By Jessica Militello

With beach days and summer BBQs behind us, the start of September rings in the start of magnificent Fall foliage, Halloween and more fun activities that come with the start of Autumn, including a list of Fall events in the area. From apple picking to seasonal ciders and more, there is tons to explore in the community. From Mystic Markets to scary movie meet-ups and more, here is a list of Fall events you do not want to miss.

A hidden gem in Sunnyside: Bistro Punta Sal blends Peruvian and Italian flavors

Aug. 29, 2025 By Jessica Militello

On a quiet street in Sunnyside, Bistro Punta Sal has its French doors wide open, letting the late August breeze emanate throughout the space, which is ornate with flowers, paintings and an array of tables and chairs for intimate dinners with friends or a romantic date night. The cozy restaurant, located at 45-51 46th St., is a hidden gem in the neighborhood that is just waiting to be discovered, as the sights and aromas of the restaurant invite guests in. 

Off-duty paramedic spots South Richmond Hill two-alarm house fire that injures nine firefighters, two civilians on Friday morning: FDNY

Nine firefighters were injured, two of them seriously, and two civilians sustained minor injuries during a two-alarm house fire in South Richmond Hill on Friday morning, but it could have been worse if not for the actions of an off-duty veteran EMT.

Paramedic Craig Biscuiti was driving to work when he noticed a column of thick black smoke and heavy flames coming from the first floor of a two-story home at 95-36 111th St. just before 7:10 a.m.

Astoria doctor sentenced to more than two decades in prison for rape and sexual abuse: DA

An Astoria doctor was sentenced to 24 years in prison on Thursday in Queens Supreme Court for raping unconscious acquaintances and sexually abusing hospital patients.

Dr. Zhi Alan Cheng, 35, of Broadway, pleaded guilty on June 30 to four counts of rape in the first degree and three counts of sexual abuse in the first degree in satisfaction of the consolidated indictments against him. He additionally entered an Alford plea to one count of sexual abuse. The defendant — a former gastroenterologist at New York-Presbyterian Queens Hospital — recorded the abuse of his unconscious victims with his cell phone in both his Astoria apartment and at the hospital.